Friday, 8 April 2011

mud crab

the one thing i was told to do while in singapore was get out of the hotel district and find some mud crab. mud... crab. what could sound more appealing? crabs are the kings of mud, after all, sitting around in it all day as if they own the stuff. if you're gonna eat some mud, basically, you should make sure to wash it down with a crab or two, if only for the nutritional value. at least i think that's the idea. i wouldn't know, as i didn't leave the hotel.

neither did jimmy, seen here doing his best impersonation of a bathing crab:


a week earlier in suburban sydney, hanging out lazily as "the river" (it was in fact just a river) receded, i was privileged to watch thousands of the stupid little things blinking in the sun, running ferociously sidewards, and scurrying back into their muddy pits whenever anything larger than an apple approached. it was an astonishing sight, but not one that inspired anything less than malicious hunger. i'm sure they have a complex social life, and have cleverly evolved into the most perfectly suited-to-mud creatures on earth, but in the meantime i'm happy to accidentally crush them and throw them in a saucepan. because crab is delicious, isn't it.

especially when it's covered with chilli:


this is from leong's legends, a taiwanese restaurant in london's chinatown famous for its special xiao long bao dim sum (i had to look that up), and less famous for its generic cantonese alternatives.

i've wandered around chinatown before, and had fairly rubbish food. at a.a. gill's insistence i once went to bar shu with a similarly overeager friend, and spent a small fortune on odd, elaborate, and dubiously tasty sichuan food. it's all about the menu choices, isn't it, and for this reason it's essential to go with someone in the know (by "know" i do of couse mean an appropriate genetic heritage, preferably including a childhood of chilli-abuse)--someone, say, like my excellent friend "mel'ung".

i don't really understand a lot of this stuff: it seems to either be mostly mush or catastrophically spicy, and sometimes both at the same time. and what a generalisation! that's like a chinese person saying "i don't understand european food: it's either made of dough or...'' which, while not exactly incorrect, would be met with wildly varied but equally confused indignation by, say, an italian and a swede.

but i've never been to china--i've rarely been to chinatown--and i've grown up in a country mostly littered with disgusting chinese takeaways, so... no, i don't hold myself to blame.

anyway. leong's legend: ignorance aside, it was wonderful.


what isn't to like? the cosy wood panelling, the waitresses' stilted but self-assured service, the table opposite us of chinese businessmen noisily slurping everything in sight--all this is as you'd expect . and the food was delicious--steaming hot and full o' flava.


a light taro and tofu noodle soup, squished up aubergines, and a bowl of braised pork belly in brown-stuff so fatty that one of us couldn't quite finish every slavering mouthful.

the speciality xiao long bao are dumplings delicately filled with some kind of broth. cheerfully likened to pointy little breasts, appropriate chopstick method involved picking them up by their nipples, dipping the mammary whole in ginger and soy, and dropping it down in one. like so:


and the highlight, as above--chilli crab! it took about fifteen minutes of scrabbling fingers to admit to ourselves that there wasn't actually much meat on the thing, but i don't think that's ever really the point. it's a primitive, visceral, carnivourous delight--pulling apart a crustacean like we own the thing. which we most assuredly did.

where's your mud now, huh?

7 comments:

mvf said...

1) father once catered a function for richard branson: they had 12 king crabs and raced them. bets were placed, shots were downed, and the winning crabs were cooked and consumed aboard the boat.

2) i used to catch soft-shelled crabs and bring them to my father's kitchen. phrreesh.

2) try crab roe xiao long bao.

edwonton.

edwin said...

i'd love to try it. post me some.

Halili H said...

you should try siew mai ( open face dumpling ) if you havent , you'll love it ! and also i hope to see a blog post about malay/malaysian cooking ;)

edwin said...

what's an open faced dumpling? isn't that just a pancake?

Halili H said...

HAHA no ! open face meaning the top of the dumpling is not folded like the other usual dumplings .

prawn siew mai is the best ! drool over this ,

http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSX0TxX8SY5_xahT5KD87vhkfmzrV7hJfbfFI4u2urHZgORaIOC_g

Win said...

i'm sure there are good evolutionary reasons why no mammory glands contain mouthfuls of hot wonton soup, but I can't think of any.

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